Who's Asking?: Native Science, Western Science, and Science Education

Douglas L. Medin (Louis W. Menk Professor of Psychology, Northwestern University),Megan Bang (Professor of Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Washington)

Who's Asking?: Native Science, Western Science, and Science Education
Format
Hardback
Publisher
MIT Press Ltd
Country
United States
Published
3 January 2014
Pages
296
ISBN
9780262026628

Who’s Asking?: Native Science, Western Science, and Science Education

Douglas L. Medin (Louis W. Menk Professor of Psychology, Northwestern University),Megan Bang (Professor of Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Washington)

Analysis and case studies show that including different orientations toward the natural world makes for more effective scientific practice and science education.The answers to scientific questions depend on who’s asking, because the questions asked and the answers sought reflect the cultural values and orientations of the questioner. These values and orientations are most often those of Western science. In Who’s Asking?, Douglas Medin and Megan Bang argue that despite the widely held view that science is objective, value-neutral, and acultural, scientists do not shed their cultures at the laboratory or classroom door; their practices reflect their values, belief systems, and worldviews. Medin and Bang argue further that scientist diversity-the participation of researchers and educators with different cultural orientations-provides new perspectives and leads to more effective science and better science education. Medin and Bang compare Native American and European American orientations toward the natural world and apply these findings to science education. The European American model, they find, sees humans as separated from nature; the Native American model sees humans as part of a natural ecosystem. Medin and Bang then report on the development of ecologically oriented and community-based science education programs on the Menominee reservation in Wisconsin and at the American Indian Center of Chicago. Medin and Bang’s novel argument for scientist diversity also has important implications for questions of minority underrepresentation in science.

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